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  2. Wilfred Bion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilfred_Bion

    Wilfred Bion in uniform in 1916. Bion was born in Mathura, North-Western Provinces, India, and educated at Bishop's Stortford College in England. [2] After the outbreak of the First World War, he served in the Tank Corps as a tank commander in France, and was awarded both the Distinguished Service Order (DSO) (on 18 February 1918, for his actions at the Battle of Cambrai), [2] [3] and the ...

  3. Bion of Smyrna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bion_of_Smyrna

    Bion (Βίων / ˈ b aɪ ɒ n /) was an ancient Greek bucolic poet from Smyrna, probably active at the end of the second or beginning of the first century BC. He is named in the Suda as one of three canonical bucolic poets alongside Theocritus and Moschus .

  4. Bion of Borysthenes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bion_of_Borysthenes

    Bion of Borysthenes (Greek: Βίων Βορυσθενίτης, gen.: Βίωνος; c. 325 – c. 250 BC) was a Greek philosopher. After being sold into slavery, and then released, he moved to Athens, where he studied in almost every school of philosophy. It is, however, for his Cynic-style diatribes that he is chiefly remembered. He satirized ...

  5. The Instance of the Letter in the Unconscious, or Reason ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Instance_of_the_Letter...

    Lacan uses his concept of the letter to distance himself from the Jungian approach to symbols and the unconscious.Whereas Jung believes that there is a collective unconscious which works with symbolic archetypes, Lacan insists that we must read the productions of the unconscious à la lettre - in other words, literally to the letter (or, more specifically, the concept of the letter which Lacan ...

  6. Bion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bion

    Bion of Smyrna, also known as Bion of Phlossa, bucolic Greek poet (fl. 2nd century BC) Bion of Abdera, a Greek philosopher from the school of Democritus (fl. c. 4th century BC) Bion of Soli, an ancient Greek writer of history; Bion of Borysthenes, Greek philosopher (325–250 BC) Bion Barnett, the founder of Barnett Bank, in Florida

  7. André Green (psychoanalyst) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/André_Green_(psychoanalyst)

    Over the decades since, R. Horacio Etchegoyen concluded that what he called "the complex itinerary of Andre Green's prolific work" has continued to demonstrate the intellectually independent way in which "Green is a Freudian analyst who has managed to integrate in a lucid synthesis the influence of authors as diverse as Lacan, Bion, and, especially, Winnicott".

  8. The Real - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Real

    Barthes reflects that the inner voice of the subject is structured in a triad of "Presence" (frustration) created by the maternal Other, "Intermittence" (castration anxiety) over the loss of the phallus as an imaginary object taken by the real father, and "Absence" that occurs from losing the phallus from the imaginary father; (symbolic desire ...

  9. Unconscious mind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unconscious_mind

    Phenomena related to semi-consciousness include awakening, implicit memory, subliminal messages, trances, hypnagogia and hypnosis. While sleep, sleepwalking, dreaming, delirium and comas may signal the presence of unconscious processes, these processes are seen as symptoms rather than the unconscious mind itself.